A federal appeals court on Wednesday struck down California’s requirement that masked federal agents identify themselves
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has struck a significant blow to California’s ability to protect its own communities.
It blocked a state law that required federal immigration agents to visibly display their identification and barred them from wearing masks.
The ruling effectively codifies the right of federal officers to operate anonymously. It strips away state sovereignty under the Constitution’s Supremacy Clause.
This comes even as the FBI issues dire warnings that this very anonymity is enabling violent criminals to terrorize the public.
In a 3 to 0 decision, the appellate panel blocked enforcement of a key provision in Californias 2025 No Vigilantes Act. State Democrats passed it to rein in the deployment of unidentifiable officers during federal immigration crackdowns. Judge Mark J. Bennett authored the opinion.
He argued that state laws directly regulating federal operations are void. Most alarmingly, the court flatly rejected Californias argument that the severe public safety risks posed by masked agents should be weighed in the decision.
“Because the United States has shown a likelihood that the Act violates the Supremacy Clause,” Bennett wrote, “the balance tips decisively in favor of the federal government. This holds irrespective of the degree to which the state law interferes with federal functions or operations.”
But California’s public safety concerns are far from hypothetical. By institutionalizing masked and anonymous federal policing, the court’s decision exacerbates a growing crisis that the FBI itself has been forced to acknowledge.
Late last year, the FBI issued a law enforcement bulletin warning that criminals are actively exploiting the precedent of masked federal agents.
Because real immigration agents are permitted to conceal their faces and operate without visible badges or marked vehicles, civilians are left with no way to distinguish between legitimate officers and violent imposters.
The Faceless State: When Federal Opacity Becomes a Playbook for Predators
According to the FBI memo and subsequent congressional scrutiny, individuals wearing tactical gear and claiming to be ICE agents have carried out kidnappings, robberies, and sexual assaults across multiple states.
In one chilling incident in New York, armed men in black vests posing as immigration enforcement tied a worker’s hands and pulled a garbage bag over their head.
By fighting for the right of its agents to remain faceless, the federal government has effectively handed a playbook to predators. It simultaneously prevents states from enacting common-sense transparency laws to stop them.
The Erosion of States’ Rights
This ruling represents a severe erosion of states’ rights. California lawmakers passed the No Vigilantes Act specifically to maintain democratic control and transparency over armed personnel operating in their neighborhoods.
However, the 9th Circuit’s interpretation dictates that a state’s fundamental right to protect its residents is entirely subordinate to federal operational preferences. The court’s assertion that federal supremacy applies regardless of how it impacts local communities means public safety takes a back seat to federal opacity.
No one is safe
As lawmakers in California continue to push for alternative ways to hold federal agents accountable—including proposing bills that would bar masked agents from employment in state law enforcement or easing civil rights lawsuits—the 9th Circuit’s decision sends a stark, chilling message.
States are being systematically stripped of their constitutional power to demand basic accountability from the armed forces patrolling their streets. This leaves vulnerable communities to wonder whether the masked men at their door federal agents or violent criminals are.
“When the ones that uphold the law refuse to show their faces, the laws they enforce are clearly unjust.”re.
Sources & Further Reading
Federal Appeals Court Ruling: U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals Opinion – United States v. State of California (Judge Mark J. Bennett)
Reporting on the 9th Circuit Decision: Federal court hands Trump a win against California limits on immigration agents (CalMatters)
The FBI Warning: Even the FBI Thinks Masked ICE Agents Are a Bad Idea (Reason Magazine / Wired)
New York Incident & Congressional Scrutiny: Letter from House Homeland Democrats to DHS citing the FBI Memo on ICE Impersonators
Background on the State Law: Understanding the California ‘No Vigilantes Act’ (SB 805)







This absolutely 💯 has to be appealed!! Californians were a little bit more protected bc we’re a Sanctuary State! Now the 9th Circuit f***ed us all!!
This isnheinous at every level. I have thought about these tactics and had same concerns for a long time. We've had law enforcement importers thru no fault of the Department's and in full view...IDs and no masks. You just sealed the fate of the entire state where no one legal or illegal is safe. Fight this. Our country as a whole is at stake. Other states need to NOW have a plan of action ready. California stay strong, in numbers and watch out for each other. Our hearts are with you.